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C**R
Seller provided correct in shape condition
Book arrived as it was described. No complaints
D**Y
Fantastic Introduction to genocide in Rwanda
Recently had to write a massive paper on the Rwandan genocide and this was a fantastic, academic book on the subject. Mamdani who was originally from a neighboring country, knew not only the native language of the Rwandans, but also knew French and English, allowing for his research to be extremely extensive. I recommend this book to anyone who is seeking a well put together prequel to one of the most savage genocides ever conducted.
M**A
Explores Rwandan Genocide from a Broader Context
Mahmood Mamdani goes on to explain the Rwandan genocide from a much broader context as other studies do. This book explores the logic in interactions and successive exclusion between groups in Rwanda as part of the explanation how the alienation of the tutsis as foreign made the genocide possible.
F**R
Five Stars
Haunting and frightening
D**W
Heavy Sledding
Respected scholar Mahmood Mamdani offers his take on the causes of the Rwandan attempted genocide of the Tutsis and how Rwanda ought to handle the aftermath. A longtime denizen of the ivory tower, Mamdani is not writing for general audiences here: his prose is denser than a nineteenth century Supreme Court opinion and often makes finer distinctions.There is a certain amount of this that is inevitable -- Mamdani is writing, at least partially, in response to people who have given facile explanations for the genocide (e.g. "the Hutus hated the Tutsis"), and his entirely justified reply is that it's not that simple. Mamdani makes a fascinating and very persuasive case for the exact historical causes of this particular genocide that differentiates it from other genocides of history -- colonialistic influence combining with pan-African political forces that pit nationalistic concerns against ethnic and political ones.That said, and with full awareness that I don't have the talent to do what I'm asking Mamdani to do, I'd like to say that his argument would have gone over a lot better if he'd been better at phrasing it. His academic language was very difficult to penetrate, even by a well-intentioned postgraduate-educated guy like me. I got to thinking towards the end that he was getting a bonus every time he added "-ize" to a noun to make it a verb.Mamdani's message that a lot of complicated problems combined to create the genocide -- from which it follows that people peddling simple, easy answers haven't been paying enough attention or are pandering to their audiences -- is important. I hope it is given deep consideration by the grad students who are best equipped with time and incentive to understand his prose, and I hope one of them figures out what I cannot: how to phrase his message in such a way that a lay audience will be willing to hear it.
A**J
Should become the standard English-language introduction
This new book by Mahmood Mamdani, one of the world's most respected Africa scholars, stands a good chance of replacing Gérard Prunier's "The Rwanda Crisis" as the standard English-language introduction to Rwanda and its genocide. Mamdani's highly-readable account focuses on the political construction of Hutu and Tutsi as racial/ethnic identities, tracing the tale from the pre-colonial era, through Belgium's administration of the country, to the 1959 Revolution and subsequent attempts to develop an overarching sense of Rwandan nationhood. These attempts were cut short by the rise of Hutu Power in the early 1990s, culminating in the horrific outbreak of mass killing in April 1994. The advantage of Mamdani's book is that it offers "history from below," arguing that the racialized hostility between Hutu and Tutsi helps to account for the extraordinary (perhaps unprecedented) degree of popular involvement in the 1994 killing campaign. He also stresses the regional context of the Rwandan civil war and genocide, with separate chapters on Uganda and Congo/Zaire. The book is rich in theoretical insights but never ponderous or pretentious. A "must" for any student of Rwanda or modern African politics more generally (see also Mamdani's award-winning 1996 book "Citizen and Subject," which fleshes out some of the theoretical frameworks used in "When Victims Become Killers").
H**A
When Victims become killers
A great book that is doing justice to the people that were rudely touched by the genocide. History plays a great part in influencing and explaining particular events that happen in the present but many people forget and view the event as inexplicable. Those who forget to ask the 'why' question are always liable to repeat the blunders of history since they never learn from its ugly mistakes. Prof. Mamdani is trying to undo this mistake. Many, especially in the west from their self righteous pedestal, look at the Rwandan genocide and judge. Mamdani goes behind the scenes of history to dig out the 'why' of this ugliest of human ventures. Drawing heavily on Franz Fanon, he casts a wide net covering the whole Great Lakes Region and Colonialism through the cold war, to tell us that the victims of injustice can only be free if they kill the oppressor. To become human they must deny life to the oppressor. The irony is, to overcome the monster of injustice, you must surpass its monstrosity, leading to the cycle of violence. Americans who read this book will come to understand better the whyness of 9/11; the Europeans will understand Hitler and Africans will grasp the whyness of so many coup d'etats, and finally an insight that is long overdue will dawn on us all and we will see the light. We will understand that without justice in the world those who work for peace labor but in vain. A must read book for serious peacemakers.
K**D
Essential reading for anyone wanting to learn the truth about what happened in Rwanda and why!
This isn't about justifying the atrocious acts of Hutus against Tutsi in Rwanda, but about trying to understand WHY. There were reasons for the madness that went beyond ethnic differences. Read this book before passing judgement.
R**S
no bias
a must read to understand waht happened from a neutral point of view. hightly recommenedAfrican history by an african
ア**ス
植民地支配とネイティヴィズム
これはルワンダで起きたGENOCIDEに関してのアカデミックな書物です。単語の難易度が高く、TOEIC900程度のレベルでは辞書に頼らざるを得ません。文脈で理解するのにも限界があります。よって遅々として進まず、まだ20ページあたりを読んでいます。しかしそれでも筆者の記している事は苦労して読む甲斐のあるものだと思います。ルワンダで起こった事は映画を通して知りましたが、それは私に強い疑問を残しました。それは普通の人々がなぜ100日で80万人もの人間を、しかも隣人をも無慈悲に殺戮するに至ったのだろうか、という事でした。その数にせよ、残虐性にせよ、想像を絶しています。部族が違うだけでそこまで憎めるものなのかと。しかしこの本ではこの悲劇をあらゆる観点から考察し、検証し、それを考え得る事だとしてしています。フツの人々にとってツチ族達は排除するべき外国人だったというのです。植民地支配や排外主義が大きな要因だとし、その考察は緻密に裏打ちされており説得力があります。まだあと数百ページも読まねばならない私がレビューなど書くのもおこがましいですが、これからこの本を買おうと考えている方の参考になればと思い投稿しました。
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